What is another word for anarchisms?

Pronunciation: [ˈanɑːkˌɪzəmz] (IPA)

Anarchisms refer to an ideology that believes in the abolition of traditional forms of authority and hierarchy. Synonyms for anarchisms include libertarianism, anti-statism, anti-authoritarianism, and radicalism. Libertarianism advocates for individual liberty and minimal state intervention. Anti-statism seeks to decrease the power of the state, while anti-authoritarianism rejects all forms of authority. Radicalism is an ideology that seeks comprehensive social and political changes. Anarchism and its synonyms have been associated with various social movements, such as labor movements, environmental justice, and anti-war movements. These ideologies strive to promote social change through empowering individuals, organizing communities, and challenging existing power structures.

What are the hypernyms for Anarchisms?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for anarchisms?

Anarchism is an ideology that advocates for the abolition of all forms of government and hierarchical power. Its antonyms, therefore, are words that describe the opposite - a system of government and hierarchies. Synonyms for antonyms of anarchisms include authoritarianism, totalitarianism, despotism, and dictatorship. These ideologies advocate for the concentration of power in the hands of one person or few people, and the repression of individual freedom and liberties. Other antonyms for anarchisms are democracy, egalitarianism, and libertarianism, which emphasize individual freedom, decentralized power structures, and equality. The oppositional nature of these ideologies highlights the ongoing debate about the best system of governance for society.

What are the antonyms for Anarchisms?

Famous quotes with Anarchisms

  • There is no need at present to produce new definitions of anarchism — it would be hard to improve on those long since devised by various eminent dead foreigners. Nor need we linger over the familiar hyphenated anarchisms, communist- and individualist- and so forth; the textbooks cover all that. More to the point is why we are no closer to anarchy today than were Godwin and Proudhon and Kropotkin and Goldman in their times.
    Bob Black
  • Although it is by definition a union-oriented ideology, there is no perceptible syndicalist presence in any union. A syndicalist is more likely to be a professor than a proletarian, more likely to be a folk singer than a factory worker. Organizers on principle, syndicalists are disunited and factionalized. Remarkably, this dullest of all anarchisms attracts some of the most irrational and hysterical adherents. Only a rather small minority of North American anarchists are syndicalists. Syndicalism will persist, if at all, as a campus-based cult in increasing isolation from the main currents of anarchism.
    Bob Black

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